"Your hope for Failure is as futile as any other hope. Unaware of its infiltration from the beginning, you topple in circle uselessly for a fate that has always awaited you."

"Tell me how you want to die, and I'll tell you who you are. In other words, how do you fill out an empty life? With women, books, or worldly ambitions? No matter what you do, the starting point is boredom, and the end self-destruction. The emblem of our fate: the sky teeming with worms. Baudelaire taught me that life is the ecstasy of worms in the sun, and happiness the dance of worms."

"Individually, every human being is as beautiful as a Botticelli portrait. Collectively, the human race is as horrifying as a Bosch hellscape."

“Why not just reject everything? Consider the vast amount of planets and galaxies out there… what if each and every one of them were free from the taint of sentient life? The universe as a symphony of non-existence, the music of the spheres ruined by one false note: our planet. Wouldn’t that make us a sort of cosmic teratoma, a planet-sized polyp despoiling the purity of an otherwise immaculate vacuum?"

"The Ancient Greeks were wrong when they classified Echidna the She-Viper as the progenitor of all horrors: human consciousness is the true Mother of Monsters."

"The Outsider must find a direction and commit himself to it, not lie moping about the meaninglessness of the world."
-Colin Wilson, Religion and the Rebel

Odd that you should post this, DarkView since I have a notebook filled with apocryphal quotes of great writers/historical personages. It was a sardonic hobby for me a ling time ago. This is an old one but one of my favorites:

I don't know if the glass is half-filled or half-empty, but I know the water is poisoned.

Life throws us the occasional pleasure in much the same fashion as we throw a dog a bone. But why do I suspect the dog has a better deal? Perhaps because the best masters are not as cruel and capricious as Fate; and the dog can expect a fairly regular supply of bones.

"The worst part of being in love is that it’s impossible to prove to the beloved how sincere you are in the matter. It requires an act of faith on both ends."

"Make no mistake. Nature favors the barbaric and the morally blind. If something exists, it’s probably in defiance of good taste. That’s why great and noble things appear to have visited us from another world; they also leave us the very moment they arrive.""I’ve always imagined the human brain to be a complex tumor."

"It’s no surprise that people are quick to accuse a person of being responsible for their own suffering. It’s a way of keeping them from acknowledging the awful fact that the same suffering can and will happen to them without rhyme or reason in the future."